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{{Short description|Urban legend |
{{Short description|Urban legend and conspiracy theory about Paul McCartney}} | ||
{{Use British English|date=August 2010}} | {{Use British English|date=August 2010}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}} | ||
{{redirect|Paul Is Dead|the graphic novel|Paul Is Dead (comics)|the Miracles episode|Paul is Dead (Miracles episode)}} | |||
{{redirect|William Shears|the industrialist|James Shears and Sons}} | |||
<!--Editors: Please resist the urge to say he is *allegedly alive* or add a "fact" tag, or create some other not-funny-anymore joke; they've been removed hundreds of times. Thank you.--> | <!--Editors: Please resist the urge to say he is *allegedly alive* or add a "fact" tag, or create some other not-funny-anymore joke; they've been removed hundreds of times. Thank you.--> | ||
] | |||
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"'''Paul is dead'''" is an ] and ] alleging that English musician ] of ] died in 1966 and was secretly replaced by a ]. The rumour began circulating in 1966, gaining broad popularity in September 1969 following reports on American college campuses. | |||
According to the theory, McCartney died in a car crash, and to spare the public from grief, the surviving Beatles, aided by Britain's ], replaced him with a McCartney look-alike, subsequently communicating this secret through subtle details of their albums. Proponents perceived clues among elements of Beatles songs and cover artwork; clue-hunting proved infectious, and by October 1969 had become an international phenomenon. Rumours declined after ] published an interview with McCartney in November 1969. | |||
⚫ | The phenomenon was the subject of analysis in the fields of ], ] and ] during the 1970s. McCartney parodied the hoax with the title and cover art of his 1993 live album, '']''. The legend was among ten of "the world's most enduring conspiracy theories" according to ] in 2009. | ||
According to the theory, McCartney died in a car crash and to spare the public from grief, the surviving Beatles replaced him with the winner of a McCartney look-alike contest, sometimes identified as "William Campbell" or "Billy Shears". Afterwards, the band left messages in their music and album artwork to communicate the truth to their fans. These include the 1968 song "]", in which Lennon sings "here's another clue for you all / ] was Paul", and the cover photo of their album '']'', in which McCartney is shown barefoot and walking out of step with his bandmates. | |||
⚫ | |||
==Beginnings== | ==Beginnings== | ||
Although rumours that Paul McCartney's health was deteriorating had existed since early 1966,<ref>{{Cite web |title=My Broken Tooth - by Paul McCartney |url=https://www.the-paulmccartney-project.com/interview/my-broken-tooth-by-paul-mccartney/ |access-date=24 March 2024 |website=The Paul McCartney project |archive-date=24 March 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240324150614/https://www.the-paulmccartney-project.com/interview/my-broken-tooth-by-paul-mccartney/ |url-status=live }}</ref> reports that McCartney had died only started circulating in September of that year. The Beatles' press officer, ], recounted this in his book, ''John, Paul, George, Ringo and Me.'' ] reporters started phoning Barrow early in that month, to confirm rumours regarding the Beatle's health and even a possible death, to which he replied that he had recently spoken with McCartney.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Barrow |first=Tony |url=http://archive.org/details/johnpaulgeorgeri0000barr_z2n5 |title=John, Paul, George, Ringo & me : the real Beatles story |date=2005 |publisher=London : Andre Deutsch |others=Internet Archive |isbn=978-0-233-00140-1}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | In early 1967, |
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For the rest of 1966, the rumour was eclipsed by similar reports that Paul McCartney was working on a solo project and that the Beatles were splitting up,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Brian Epstein denies The Beatles are splitting |url=https://www.the-paulmccartney-project.com/1966/10/brian-epstein-denies-paul-mccartney-is-leaving-the-beatles/ |access-date=8 March 2024 |website=The Paul McCartney project}}</ref> which were backed by their disappearance from the public eye and the postponement of their scheduled tours in late 1966.<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/inmylifebrianep00gell/page/132/mode/2up | isbn=978-0-312-26564-9 | title=In my life : The Brian Epstein story | date=17 April 2024 | last1=Geller | first1=Debbie | publisher=Macmillan }}</ref> | |||
⚫ | In early 1967, the rumour resurfaced in London, this time claiming that Paul McCartney had been killed in a traffic accident while driving along the ] on 7 January.<ref name="Yoakum/Gadfly">{{cite web|last=Yoakum|first=Jim|date=May–June 2000|url=http://www.gadflyonline.com/archive/MayJune00/archive-mccartney.html|title=The Man Who Killed Paul McCartney|work=]|access-date=27 September 2018|archive-date=26 February 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150226165030/http://www.gadflyonline.com/archive/MayJune00/archive-mccartney.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The rumour was acknowledged and rebutted in the February issue of '']''.<ref name="Yoakum/Gadfly" /> McCartney then alluded to the rumour during a press conference held about the release of '']'' in May.<ref name="moriarty">{{cite web|last=Moriarty|first=Brian|date=1999|url=http://ludix.com/moriarty/paul.html|title=Who Buried Paul?|publisher=ludix.com|access-date=27 September 2018|archive-date=8 March 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230308140906/http://ludix.com/moriarty/paul.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=November 2019}} | ||
The Beatles' producer ] once claimed that, during the Beatles’ visit to ], "a number of people pretending to be Beatles" were employed by the promoters of the band's concerts in order to distract the crowds of fans from the real Beatles, while they were exiting a hotel.<ref>{{Cite web |title=All You Need Is Ears {{!}} PDF {{!}} Sound Recording And Reproduction {{!}} Johann Sebastian Bach |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/469601510/All-You-Need-Is-Ears |access-date=24 March 2024 |website=Scribd}}</ref> According to journalist Maureen O'Grady, who wrote about it in the May 1966 issue of ''RAVE Magazine'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=RAVE Magazine, June 1966 |url=https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Rave-Magazine/1966/RAVE-1966-05.pdf |access-date=24 March 2024 |archive-date=24 March 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240324150612/https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Rave-Magazine/1966/RAVE-1966-05.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> such a tactic was used when the Beatles first played in ], in 1964. As a result, stories began to circulate that the Beatles had sent four lookalikes to perform on stage on one of their American tours.<ref>{{Citation |title=Beatles Los Angeles Press Conference 1966}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=George Harrison & Ravi Shankar - The Dick Cavett Show (1971)}}</ref> Both Paul McCartney and ] later refuted these claims. | |||
Despite the Beatles dismissing such accusations, they soon began accompanying the notion that McCartney had died. By late 1967, it was further stated that the Beatles had covered up his death by employing a Paul McCartney impersonator to stand in for him.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Davies |first=Hunter |url=http://archive.org/details/beatlesfootballm0000davi_v8d0 |title=The Beatles, football and me |date=2007 |publisher=London : Headline Review |others=Internet Archive |isbn=978-0-7553-1403-4}}</ref> For example, journalist ] was attending McCartney's engagement party in 1967 when a friend of the band told him that McCartney had been replaced. | |||
By the mid-1960s, the Beatles were known for sometimes including ] in their music.{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|pp=16, 273–75}} Analysing their lyrics for hidden meaning had also become a popular trend in the US.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=115}} In November 1968, their ] (also known as the "White Album") was released containing the track "]". ] wrote the song in response to "gobbledygook" said about ''Sgt. Pepper''. In a later interview, he said that he was purposely confusing listeners with lines such as "the Walrus was Paul" – a reference to his song "]" from the 1967 EP and album '']''.{{Sfn |The Beatles|2000|p= 306}} | |||
{{listen | {{listen | ||
⚫ | | type = music | ||
| filename = Revolution-9-forward.ogg | | filename = Revolution-9-forward.ogg | ||
| title = "Revolution 9" (section) | | title = "Revolution 9" (section) | ||
| description = The allegedly backmasked section of "Revolution 9" | | description = The allegedly backmasked section of "Revolution 9" | ||
⚫ | | |
||
| filename2 = Revolution-9-reversed.ogg | | filename2 = Revolution-9-reversed.ogg | ||
| title2 = "Revolution 9" (section) (reversed) | | title2 = "Revolution 9" (section) (reversed) | ||
| description2 = The same section reversed, which some |
| description2 = The same section reversed, which some believe sounds like "turn me on, dead man" | ||
| format2 = ] | |||
}} | }} | ||
⚫ | On 17 September 1969, Tim Harper, an editor of the ''Drake Times-Delphic'', the student newspaper of ] in ], published an article titled "Is Beatle Paul McCartney Dead?" The article addressed a rumour being circulated on campus that cited clues from recent Beatles albums, including a message interpreted as "Turn me on, dead man", heard when the White Album track "]" is played backwards. Also referenced was the back cover of ''Sgt. Pepper'', where every Beatle except McCartney is photographed facing the viewer. He is wearing a black badge "OPD" (Officially Pronounced Dead). On the front cover, Starr in a suit looks at the flowered grave, mourning, and McCartney (in a suit) puts his hand on his shoulder. Starr looks sadly down at a tomb shaped like a P, with 4 strings looking like a bass. The front cover of ''Magical Mystery Tour'' depicts one unidentified band member in a differently coloured suit from the other three.<ref>{{cite web |last=Schmidt |first=Bart |url=http://blogs.library.drake.edu/2009/09/18/it-was-40-years-ago-yesterday/ |title=It Was 40 Years Ago, Yesterday ...|publisher=Drake University: Cowles Library blog |date=18 September 2009 |access-date=19 September 2010}}</ref> According to music journalist Merrell Noden, Harper's ''Drake Times-Delphic'' was the first to publish an article on the "Paul is dead" theory.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" />{{refn|group=nb|Writing in 1977, author ] said the theory has been traced to a student thesis at ] and to a prank article published in the student newspaper for ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} The university eventually retracted the article in 2023 due to the false and plagiarized nature of its content, writing an apology to McCartney for their role in propagating the hoax.<ref name="CBS 2023">{{cite news |last1=CBS Chicago Team |title=LOCAL NEWS Illinois student newspaper retracts 1969 story on false rumors of Paul McCartney's death |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/niu-newspaper-retraction-paul-mccartney/?intcid=CNM-00-10abd1h&mibextid=S66gvF#ln136irrzok5isnblzk |access-date=27 September 2023 |work=CBS News Chicago |agency=CBS |publisher=Paramount Global |date=26 September 2023 |ref=CBS 2023}}</ref>}} Harper later said that it had become the subject of discussion among students at the start of the new academic year, and he added: "A lot of us, because of ] and the so-called ], were ready, willing and able to believe just about any sort of conspiracy."<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> | ||
In late September 1969, the Beatles released the album '']'' while they were in the process of disbanding.{{sfn|Miles|2001|pp=353, 354}} On 10 October, the Beatles' press officer, ], responded to the rumour stating: | |||
⚫ | On 17 September 1969, Tim Harper, an editor of the ''Drake Times-Delphic'', the student newspaper of ] in ], published an article titled "Is Beatle Paul McCartney Dead?" The article addressed a rumour being circulated on campus that cited clues from recent Beatles albums, including a message interpreted as "Turn me on, dead man", heard when the White Album track "]" is played backwards. Also referenced was the back cover of ''Sgt. Pepper'', where every Beatle except McCartney is photographed facing the viewer, |
||
<blockquote> | |||
Recently we've been getting a flood of inquiries asking about reports that Paul is dead. We've been getting questions like that for years, of course, but in the past few weeks we've been getting them at the office and home night and day. I'm even getting telephone calls from disc jockeys and others in the United States.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Paul McCartney Asserts He's 'Alive and Well' |newspaper=] |location=Camden, New Jersey |date=10 October 1969 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=aHwzAAAAIBAJ&pg=5871,970425&dq=mccartney&hl=en |title=Beatle Paul McCartney Is Really Alive |agency=UPI |work=] |date=11 October 1969 |page=5 |archive-date=17 October 2022 |access-date=18 November 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221017154931/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=aHwzAAAAIBAJ&pg=5871,970425&dq=mccartney&hl=en |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Throughout this period, McCartney felt isolated from his bandmates in his opposition to their choice of business manager, ], and distraught at Lennon's private announcement that he was leaving the group.{{sfn|Sounes|2010|pp=261, 263–64}}{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|pp=1, 396, 398}} With the birth of his daughter ] in late August, McCartney had withdrawn to focus on his family life.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=559}} On 22 October, the day that the "Paul is dead" rumour became an international news story,{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=332}} McCartney, his wife ] and their two daughters travelled to Scotland to spend time at his farm near ].{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=358}} | |||
==Growth== | ==Growth== | ||
On 12 October 1969, a caller to ] radio station ] told |
On 12 October 1969, a caller to ] radio station ] told disc jockey ] about the rumour and its clues.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> Gibb and other callers then discussed the rumour on air for the next hour,<ref>{{cite news|last=Morris|first=Julie|title=The Beatle Paul Mystery – As Big as Rock Music Itself|newspaper=]|date=23 October 1969|page=6}}</ref> during which Gibb offered further potential clues.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=241}} Two days later, '']'' published a satirical review of ''Abbey Road'' by ] student ], who had listened to the exchange on Gibb's show,<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> under the headline "McCartney Dead; New Evidence Brought to Light".<ref name="labour">{{cite news|last=LaBour|first=Fred|url=https://digital.bentley.umich.edu/midaily/mdp.39015071754159/374 |title=McCartney Dead; New Evidence Brought to Light|newspaper=]|date=14 October 1969|page=2}}</ref>{{sfn|Gould|2007|pp=593–94}} It identified various clues to McCartney's alleged death on Beatles album covers, particularly on the ''Abbey Road'' sleeve. LaBour later said he had invented many of the clues and was astonished when the story was picked up by newspapers across the United States.<ref name=Allen>{{Cite news|url=http://michigantoday.umich.edu/2009/11/story.php?id=7565&tr=y&auid=5578331 |last=Glenn |first=Allen |title=Paul Is Dead (Said Fred) |newspaper=]|date=11 November 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101228202339/http://michigantoday.umich.edu/2009/11/story.php?id=7565&tr=y&auid=5578331 |archive-date=28 December 2010 }}</ref> Noden writes that "Very soon, every college campus, every radio station, had a resident expert."<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> WKNR fuelled the rumour further with its two-hour programme ''The Beatle Plot'', which first aired on 19 October. The show – which has been called "infamous", a "fraud" and a "mockumentary" – brought enormous worldwide publicity to Gibb and WKNR.<ref>{{cite book | last =Coley | first =Sam | title =Music Documentaries for Radio| publisher =] | series = | volume = | edition = | date = 2021| location = | pages = | language = | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QZJFEAAAQBAJ&q=%22the+beatle+plot%22 | doi = | id = | isbn =9781000463989| quote=}}</ref> | ||
The story was soon taken up by more mainstream radio stations in the New York area, ] and ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} In the early hours of 21 October, WABC disc jockey ] discussed the rumour on-air for over an hour before being pulled off the air for breaking format. At that time of night, WABC's signal covered a wide listening area and could be heard in 38 US states and, at times, in other countries.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.musicradio77.com/transm.html |title=Why Did WABC Have Such a Great Signal? |publisher=Musicradio 77 WABC |access-date=5 August 2007}}</ref> Although the Beatles' press office denied the rumour, McCartney's atypical withdrawal from public life contributed to its escalation.{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=262}} ], a student broadcaster in 1969, later said that the escalation was indicative of the ] influence of ], the Beatles and ], since: "Every song from them – starting about late 1966 – became a personal message, worthy of endless scrutiny ... they were guidelines on how to live your life."<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> | The story was soon taken up by more mainstream radio stations in the New York area, ] and ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} In the early hours of 21 October, WABC disc jockey ] discussed the rumour on-air for over an hour before being pulled off the air for breaking format. At that time of night, WABC's signal covered a wide listening area and could be heard in 38 US states and, at times, in other countries.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.musicradio77.com/transm.html |title=Why Did WABC Have Such a Great Signal? |publisher=Musicradio 77 WABC |access-date=5 August 2007 |archive-date=19 December 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101219005130/http://musicradio77.com/transm.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Although the Beatles' press office denied the rumour, McCartney's atypical withdrawal from public life contributed to its escalation.{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=262}} ], a student broadcaster in 1969, later said that the escalation was indicative of the ] influence of ], the Beatles and ], since: "Every song from them – starting about late 1966 – became a personal message, worthy of endless scrutiny ... they were guidelines on how to live your life."<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> | ||
WMCA dispatched ] to the Beatles' ] headquarters in London on 23 October,{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=333}} to further his extended coverage of the "Paul is dead" theory.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}}{{sfn|McKinney|2003|p=291}} There, ] told Bennett: "If people are gonna believe it, they're gonna believe it. I can only say it's not true."{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=333}} In a radio interview with John Small of WKNR, Lennon said that the rumour was "insane" but good publicity for ''Abbey Road''.{{sfn|Winn|2009|pp=332–33}}{{refn|group=nb|Estranged from McCartney, Lennon said: "Paul McCartney couldn't die without the world knowing it. The same as he couldn't get married ... go on holiday without the world knowing it. It's just insanity – but it's a great plug for ''Abbey Road''."{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=342}}}} On ] night 1969, ] in ] broadcast a |
WMCA dispatched ] to the Beatles' ] headquarters in London on 23 October,{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=333}} to further his extended coverage of the "Paul is dead" theory.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}}{{sfn|McKinney|2003|p=291}} There, ] told Bennett: "If people are gonna believe it, they're gonna believe it. I can only say it's not true."{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=333}} In a radio interview with John Small of WKNR, Lennon said that the rumour was "insane" but good publicity for ''Abbey Road''.{{sfn|Winn|2009|pp=332–33}}{{refn|group=nb|Estranged from McCartney, Lennon said: "Paul McCartney couldn't die without the world knowing it. The same as he couldn't get married ... go on holiday without the world knowing it. It's just insanity – but it's a great plug for ''Abbey Road''."{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=342}}}} On ] night 1969, ] in ], broadcast a programme titled ''Paul McCartney Is Alive and Well – Maybe'', which analysed Beatles lyrics and other clues. The WKBW DJs concluded that the "Paul is dead" hoax was fabricated by Lennon.<ref name="Bisco/ReelRadio">{{cite web|first=John|last=Bisci|url=http://www.reelradio.com/gifts/pmwkbw69.html|title=WKBW: Paul McCartney Is Alive And Well – Maybe, 1969|publisher=]|access-date=15 May 2019|archive-date=7 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221007170625/https://www.reelradio.com/gifts/pmwkbw69.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
Before the end of October 1969, several record releases had exploited the phenomenon of McCartney's alleged demise.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} These included "The Ballad of Paul" by the Mystery Tour;{{sfn|Castleman|Podrazik|1976|p=281}} "Brother Paul" by Billy Shears and the All Americans; "So Long Paul" by Werbley Finster, a pseudonym for ];{{sfn|McKinney|2003|p=292}} and Zacharias and His Tree People's "We're All Paul Bearers (Parts One and Two)".{{sfn|Clayson|2003|p=118}} Another song was ]'s "Saint Paul",{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} which had been a minor hit in June that year and was subsequently adopted by radio stations as a tribute to "the late Paul McCartney".<ref name="Knight">{{cite magazine|url=http://blogcritics.org/music/article/terry-knight-speaks |title=Terry Knight Speaks |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111025171758/http://blogcritics.org/music/article/terry-knight-speaks/ |archive-date=25 October 2011 |magazine=]|date=2 March 2004}}</ref>{{refn|group=nb|A ] recording artist, Knight had been present during the White Album session when Starr temporarily left the band,<ref name="Knight" /> in August 1968.{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|p=271}} In the song, the singer conveys his fears that the Beatles were about to disband.<ref name="Knight" />}} According to a report in '']'' magazine in early November, ] planned to issue a documentary LP of radio segments discussing the phenomenon.<ref name="BB/DiskCoverage">{{cite magazine|author= |
Before the end of October 1969, several record releases had exploited the phenomenon of McCartney's alleged demise.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} These included "The Ballad of Paul" by the Mystery Tour;{{sfn|Castleman|Podrazik|1976|p=281}} "Brother Paul" by Billy Shears and the All Americans; "So Long Paul" by Werbley Finster, a pseudonym for ];{{sfn|McKinney|2003|p=292}} and Zacharias and His Tree People's "We're All Paul Bearers (Parts One and Two)".{{sfn|Clayson|2003|p=118}} Another song was ]'s "Saint Paul",{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} which had been a minor hit in June that year and was subsequently adopted by radio stations as a tribute to "the late Paul McCartney".<ref name="Knight">{{cite magazine|url=http://blogcritics.org/music/article/terry-knight-speaks |title=Terry Knight Speaks |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111025171758/http://blogcritics.org/music/article/terry-knight-speaks/ |archive-date=25 October 2011 |magazine=]|date=2 March 2004}}</ref>{{refn|group=nb|A ] recording artist, Knight had been present during the White Album session when Starr temporarily left the band,<ref name="Knight" /> in August 1968.{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|p=271}} In the song, the singer conveys his fears that the Beatles were about to disband.<ref name="Knight" />}} A cover version of "Saint Paul" by New Zealand singer ] reached the top of that nation's singles charts.<ref name="Shane">{{cite AV media |url=https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/saint-paul-1969 |title=Saint Paul: Shane, 1969 |publisher=] |access-date=10 October 2022 |archive-date=13 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221013145608/https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/saint-paul-1969 |url-status=live }}</ref> According to a report in '']'' magazine in early November, ] planned to issue a documentary LP of radio segments discussing the phenomenon.<ref name="BB/DiskCoverage">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=McCartney 'Death' Gets 'Disk Coverage' Dearth|magazine=]|date=8 November 1969|page=3}}</ref> In Canada, ] exploited the rumour in their artwork for '']'', a repackaging of the Beatles' pre-fame recordings with ], using a cover that showed four candles, one of which had just been snuffed out.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=130}} | ||
==Premise== | ==Premise== | ||
] | ] | ||
Proponents of the theory maintained that, on 9 November 1966, McCartney had an argument with his bandmates during a Beatles recording session and drove off angrily in his car, crashed, and was decapitated.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}}{{sfn|Hoffmann|Bailey|1990|pp=165–66}} To spare the public from grief, or simply as a joke, the surviving Beatles replaced him with the winner of a McCartney look-alike contest.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} This scenario was facilitated by the Beatles' recent retirement from live performance and by their choosing to present themselves with a new image for their next album, ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band''.{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=593}} | |||
Many versions of this theory have arisen since its initial exposure to the public, but most proponents of the theory maintain that, on 9 November 1966 (or alternatively, 11 September),<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Life and Death of Paul McCartney 1942-1966: A Very … |url=https://www.goodreads.com/work/46743150-the-life-and-death-of-paul-mccartney-1942-1966-a-very-english-mystery |access-date=2023-04-05 |website=Goodreads |language=en}}</ref>{{Better source needed|date=April 2023}} McCartney had an argument with his bandmates during a ''Sgt. Pepper'' recording session and drove off angrily in his car, then, distracted by a meter maid ("]"), failed to notice that the traffic lights had changed ("]"), crashed, and was decapitated ("]").{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}}{{sfn|Hoffmann|Bailey|1990|pp=165–66}} A funeral service for McCartney was held, with eulogies by Harrison ("]") and Starr ("Don't Pass Me By"), followed by a procession (''Abbey Road''{{'}}s front cover), with Lennon as the priest officiating his funeral and burying him (the alleged "I Buried Paul" statement in "]"). To spare the public from grief, or simply as a joke, the surviving Beatles replaced him with the winner of a McCartney look-alike contest.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} This scenario was facilitated by the Beatles' recent retirement from live performance and by their choosing to present themselves with a new image for their next album, ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'', which they began recording later that month.{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=593}} | |||
⚫ | In LaBour's telling, the stand-in was an "orphan from Edinburgh named William Campbell" whom the Beatles then trained to impersonate McCartney.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial">{{cite book|first=Merrell|last=Noden|chapter=Dead Man Walking|year=2003|title=]: 1000 Days of Revolution (The Beatles' Final Years – Jan 1, 1968 to Sept 27, 1970)|location=London|publisher=Emap|page=114}}</ref> Others contended that the man's name was |
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⚫ | In LaBour's telling, the stand-in was an "orphan from Edinburgh named William Campbell" whom the Beatles then trained to impersonate McCartney.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial">{{cite book|first=Merrell|last=Noden|chapter=Dead Man Walking|year=2003|title=]: 1000 Days of Revolution (The Beatles' Final Years – Jan 1, 1968 to Sept 27, 1970)|location=London|publisher=Emap|page=114}}</ref> Others contended that the man's name was Bill Shepherd,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Uharriet |first=Thomas E. |title=The Memoirs of Billy Shears |date=2009-09-09 |publisher=MACCA CORP: Peppers Press |year=2009 |isbn=9781959517009 |language=en}}</ref> later altered to Billy Shears,{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}} and the replacement was instigated by Britain's ] out of concern for the severe distress McCartney's death would cause the Beatles' audience.<ref name="Shivani/Dawn">{{cite news|first=Anis|last=Shivani|title=Paul is Dead: The Conspiracy Theory That Won't Go Away|date=15 January 2017|newspaper=]|url=https://www.dawn.com/news/1307942|access-date=28 September 2018|archive-date=20 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221020162457/https://www.dawn.com/news/1307942|url-status=live}}</ref> In this latter telling, the surviving Beatles were said to be wracked with guilt over their actions, and therefore left messages in their music and album artwork to communicate the truth to their fans.<ref name="Shivani/Dawn" /><ref name="Time">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Not stated-->|title=Separating Fact from Fiction: Paul Is Dead|date=July 2009|magazine=]|url=https://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1860871_1860876_1860997,00.html|access-date=28 September 2018|archive-date=5 October 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131005075146/http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1860871_1860876_1860997,00.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
<!--Editors: Please do not add any more clues; after much discussion on the talk page, it has been deemed that the two given are sufficient to illustrate this aspect of the subject--> | <!--Editors: Please do not add any more clues; after much discussion on the talk page, it has been deemed that the two given are sufficient to illustrate this aspect of the subject--> | ||
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|quote=A DJ put all those signs together: Paul with no shoes ... and the Volkswagen Beetle. Then there was '']'', where we three had red roses and he had a black one. It was just madness ... There was no way we could ''prove'' he was alive.{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=342}} | |||
⚫ | Dozens of supposed clues to McCartney's death have been identified by fans and followers of the legend. These include messages perceived when listening to songs being ] and symbolic interpretations of both lyrics and album cover imagery.{{sfn|Patterson|1998|pp=193–97}}{{sfn|Clayson|2003|pp=117–18}} |
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⚫ | Dozens of supposed clues to McCartney's death have been identified by fans and followers of the legend. These include messages perceived when listening to songs being ] and symbolic interpretations of both lyrics and album cover imagery.{{sfn|Patterson|1998|pp=193–97}}{{sfn|Clayson|2003|pp=117–18}} Two frequently cited examples are the suggestions that the words "I buried Paul" are spoken by Lennon in the final section of the song "Strawberry Fields Forever", which the Beatles recorded in November and December 1966 (Lennon later said that the words were actually "Cranberry sauce"), and that the words "number nine, number nine" in "]" (from the "]") became "turn me on, dead man, turn me on, dead man" when played backwards. A similar reversal at the end of "]" (another "White Album" track) yielded "Paul is dead man, miss him, miss him, miss him…".{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|p=273fn}}<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Yorke|first=Ritchie|title=A Private Talk With John|magazine=]|date=7 February 1970|page=22}}</ref> | ||
Another example is the interpretation of the ''Abbey Road'' album cover as depicting a ] |
Another example is the interpretation of the ''Abbey Road'' album cover as depicting a ]: Lennon, dressed in white, is said to symbolise the ]; Starr, dressed in black, symbolises the ]; ], in denim, represents the ]; and McCartney, barefoot and out of step with the others, symbolises the ].<ref name="labour" /> The number plate of the white ] in the photo – containing the characters LMW 281F (mistakenly read as "28IF") – was identified as further "evidence".<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" />{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|pp=341, 342}} "28IF" represented McCartney's age "if" he had still been alive (although McCartney was 27 when the album was recorded and released),{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=262}} while "LMW" stood for "Linda McCartney weeps" or "Linda McCartney, widow" (although McCartney and the then-Linda Eastman had not yet met in 1966, the year of his alleged death).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Wawzenek |first1=Brian |title=THE DAY PAUL MCCARTNEY MET LINDA EASTMAN |url=https://ultimateclassicrock.com/paul-mccartney-meets-linda-eastman/ |website=Ultimate Classic Rock |date=15 May 2017 |access-date=22 November 2022 |archive-date=22 November 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221122205631/https://ultimateclassicrock.com/paul-mccartney-meets-linda-eastman/ |url-status=live }}</ref>{{sfn|Draper|2008|p=76}}{{refn|group=nb|The fact that he would have been 27 in late 1969, rather than 28, was dismissed with the rationale that, in the ] tradition, infants were one year old at birth.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" />}} That the left-handed McCartney held a cigarette in his right hand was also said to support the idea that he was an impostor.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} | ||
==Rebuttal== | ==Rebuttal== | ||
] | ] | ||
On 21 October 1969, the Beatles' press office again issued statements denying the rumour, deeming it "a load of old rubbish"<ref>{{cite news|title=Beatle Spokesman Calls Rumor of McCartney's Death 'Rubbish'|newspaper=]|date=22 October 1969|page=8}}</ref> and saying that "the story has been circulating for about two years – we get letters from all sorts of nuts but Paul is still very much with us".<ref>{{cite news|last=Phillips|first=B.J.|title=McCartney 'Death' Rumors|newspaper=]|date=22 October 1969|page=B1}}</ref> On 24 October, ] reporter Chris Drake was granted an interview with McCartney at his farm.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=358}} McCartney said that the speculation was understandable, given that he normally did "an interview a week" to ensure he remained in the news.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=334}} Part of the interview was first broadcast on ], on 26 October,{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=359}} and subsequently on WMCA in the US.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=334}} According to author John Winn, McCartney had |
On 21 October 1969, the Beatles' press office again issued statements denying the rumour, deeming it "a load of old rubbish"<ref>{{cite news|title=Beatle Spokesman Calls Rumor of McCartney's Death 'Rubbish'|newspaper=]|date=22 October 1969|page=8}}</ref> and saying that "the story has been circulating for about two years – we get letters from all sorts of nuts but Paul is still very much with us".<ref>{{cite news|last=Phillips|first=B.J.|title=McCartney 'Death' Rumors|newspaper=]|date=22 October 1969|page=B1}}</ref> On 24 October, ] reporter Chris Drake was granted an interview with McCartney at his farm.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=358}} McCartney said that the speculation was understandable, given that he normally did "an interview a week" to ensure he remained in the news.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=334}} Part of the interview was first broadcast on ], on 26 October,{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=359}} and subsequently on WMCA in the US.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=334}} According to author John Winn, McCartney had agreed to the interview "in hopes that people hearing his voice would see the light", but the ploy failed.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=334}}{{refn|group=nb|In the 2000 book '']'', McCartney says that his reaction to the rumour's growth had been: "Well, we'd better play it for all it's worth. It's publicity, isn't it?"{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=342}}}} | ||
McCartney was secretly filmed by a ] crew as he worked on his farm. As in his and Linda's segment in the Beatles' promotional clip for "]", which the couple filmed privately around this time, McCartney was unshaven and unusually scruffy-looking in his appearance.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=335}} His next visitors were a reporter and photographer from '']'' magazine. Irate at the intrusion, he swore at the pair, threw a bucket of water over them and was captured on film attempting to hit the photographer. Fearing that the photos would damage his image, McCartney then approached the pair and agreed to pose for a photo with his family and answer the reporter's questions, in exchange for the roll of film containing the offending pictures.{{sfn|Sounes|2010|pp=262–63}} In Winn's description, the family portrait used for ''Life''{{'}}s cover shows McCartney no longer "shabbily attired", but "clean-shaven and casually but smartly dressed".{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=335}} | McCartney was secretly filmed by a ] crew as he worked on his farm. As in his and Linda's segment in the Beatles' promotional clip for "]", which the couple filmed privately around this time, McCartney was unshaven and unusually scruffy-looking in his appearance.{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=335}} His next visitors were a reporter and photographer from '']'' magazine. Irate at the intrusion, he swore at the pair, threw a bucket of water over them and was captured on film attempting to hit the photographer. Fearing that the photos would damage his image, McCartney then approached the pair and agreed to pose for a photo with his family and answer the reporter's questions, in exchange for the roll of film containing the offending pictures.{{sfn|Sounes|2010|pp=262–63}} In Winn's description, the family portrait used for ''Life''{{'}}s cover shows McCartney no longer "shabbily attired", but "clean-shaven and casually but smartly dressed".{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=335}} | ||
Following the publication of the article and the photo, in the issue dated 7 November,{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=335}} the rumour started to decline.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> In the interview, McCartney was |
Following the publication of the article and the photo, in the issue dated 7 November,{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=335}} the rumour started to decline.<ref name="Noden/MojoSpecial" /> In the interview, McCartney said the rumour was "bloody stupid" and went on to say: | ||
{{Blockquote|Perhaps the rumour started because I haven't been much in the press lately. I have done enough press for a lifetime, and I don't have anything to say these days. I am happy to be with my family and I will work when I work. I was switched on for ten years and I never switched off. Now I am switching off whenever I can. I would rather be a little less famous these days.<ref name=neary>{{cite magazine|last1 = Neary|first1 = John|date = 7 November 1969|title = The Magical McCartney Mystery|magazine =]|pages = 103–06}}</ref>}} | |||
==Aftermath== | ==Aftermath== | ||
In November 1969, ] sales managers reported a significant increase in sales of Beatles catalogue albums, attributed to the rumour.<ref name="Burks/RS" /> Rocco Catena, Capitol's vice-president of national merchandising, estimated that "this is going to be the biggest month in history in terms of Beatles sales".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}}<ref name="Burks/RS">{{cite magazine|last=Burks|first=John|title=A Pile of Money on Paul's 'Death'|magazine=]|date=29 November 1969|pages=6, 10}}</ref> The rumour benefited the commercial performance of ''Abbey Road'' in the US, where it comfortably outsold all of the band's previous albums.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|pp=126–27}} ''Sgt. Pepper'' and ''Magical Mystery Tour'', both of which had been off the charts since February, re-entered the ''Billboard'' ] chart,{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} peaking at number 101 and number 109, respectively.{{sfn|Castleman|Podrazik|1976|p=361}} | In November 1969, ] sales managers reported a significant increase in sales of Beatles catalogue albums, attributed to the rumour.<ref name="Burks/RS" /> Rocco Catena, Capitol's vice-president of national merchandising, estimated that "this is going to be the biggest month in history in terms of Beatles sales".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}}<ref name="Burks/RS">{{cite magazine|last=Burks|first=John|title=A Pile of Money on Paul's 'Death'|magazine=]|date=29 November 1969|pages=6, 10}}</ref> The rumour benefited the commercial performance of ''Abbey Road'' in the US, where it comfortably outsold all of the band's previous albums.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|pp=126–27}} ''Sgt. Pepper'' and ''Magical Mystery Tour'', both of which had been off the charts since February, re-entered the ''Billboard'' ] chart,{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} peaking at number 101 and number 109, respectively.{{sfn|Castleman|Podrazik|1976|p=361}} | ||
A television special dedicated to "Paul is dead" was broadcast on ] in New York on 30 November.<ref name=Allen/> Titled ''Paul McCartney: The Complete Story, Told for the First and Last Time'', it was set in a courtroom and hosted by celebrity lawyer ],{{sfn|McKinney|2003|p=292}} who ]d LaBour,<ref name=Allen/> Gibb and other proponents of the theory, and heard opposing views from "witnesses" such as McCartney's friend ] and Allen Klein.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} Bailey left it to the viewer to determine a conclusion.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} Before the recording, LaBour told Bailey that his article had been intended as a joke, to which Bailey sighed and replied, "Well, we have an hour of television to do; you're going to have to go along with this."<ref name=Allen/> | A television special dedicated to "Paul is dead" was broadcast on ] in New York on 30 November.<ref name=Allen/> Titled ''Paul McCartney: The Complete Story, Told for the First and Last Time'', it was set in a courtroom and hosted by celebrity lawyer ],{{sfn|McKinney|2003|p=292}} who ]d LaBour,<ref name=Allen/> Gibb and other proponents of the theory, and heard opposing views from "witnesses" such as McCartney's friend ], brother ] and ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} Bailey left it to the viewer to determine a conclusion.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=127}} Before the recording, LaBour told Bailey that his article had been intended as a joke, to which Bailey sighed and replied, "Well, we have an hour of television to do; you're going to have to go along with this."<ref name=Allen/> | ||
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|quote=It was a bit weird meeting people shortly after that, because they'd be looking at the back of my ears, looking a bit through me. And it was weird doing the "I really ''am'' him" stuff.{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=342}} | |||
⚫ | McCartney returned to London in December. Bolstered by Linda's support, he began recording his debut solo album at his home in ].{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=264}} Titled '']'', and recorded without his bandmates' knowledge,{{sfn|Doggett|2011|pp=111, 121}}{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|p=2}} it was "one of the best-kept secrets in rock history" until shortly before its release in April 1970, according to author ], and led to the announcement of the ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=135}} In his 1971 song "]", in which he attacked McCartney's character,{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|p=399}} Lennon described the theorists as "freaks" who |
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⚫ | McCartney returned to London in December. Bolstered by Linda's support, he began recording his debut solo album at his home in ].{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=264}} Titled '']'', and recorded without his bandmates' knowledge,{{sfn|Doggett|2011|pp=111, 121}}{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|p=2}} it was "one of the best-kept secrets in rock history" until shortly before its release in April 1970, according to author ], and led to the announcement of the ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=135}} In his 1971 song "]", in which he attacked McCartney's character,{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|p=399}} Lennon described the theorists as "freaks" who “was right when they said you was dead".{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=290}} The rumour was also cited in the hoax surrounding the Canadian band ],<ref name="Raymond/Vulture" /> after a January 1977 review of their debut album, '']'', sparked rumours that the group were in fact the Beatles.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|pp=189–90}} In one telling, this theory contended that the album had been recorded in late 1966 but then mislaid until 1975, at which point Lennon, Harrison and Starr elected to issue it in McCartney's memory.<ref name="Raymond/Vulture">{{cite web|url=https://www.vulture.com/2016/10/pop-culture-conspiracy-theories-c-v-r.html|first=Adam K.|last=Raymond|title=The 70 Greatest Conspiracy Theories in Pop-Culture History|website=]|date=23 October 2016|access-date=16 November 2019|archive-date=25 October 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161025225133/https://www.vulture.com/2016/10/pop-culture-conspiracy-theories-c-v-r.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
LaBour later became notable as the bassist for the ] group ], which he co-founded in 1977. In 2008, he joked that his success as a musician had extended his ] for his part in the rumour to "seventeen minutes".<ref>{{cite magazine|last1=LaBour|first1=Fred|title=True Westerners: Fred Labour – Too Slim of Riders in the Sky|url=http://www.truewestmagazine.com/fred-labour-too-slim-of-riders-in-the-sky/|magazine=]|access-date=28 June 2016|date=1 August 2008}}</ref> In 2015, he told '']'' that he is still periodically contacted by conspiracy theorists who have attempted to present him with supposed new developments on the McCartney rumours.<ref>{{cite news|last=Rubin|first=Neal|title=Paul McCartney still isn't dead. Neither is the story|url=http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/columnists/neal-rubin/2015/09/09/neal-rubin-column-riders-sky/71974774/|newspaper=]|date=10 September 2015|access-date=27 June 2016}}</ref> | LaBour later became notable as the bassist for the ] group ], which he co-founded in 1977. In 2008, he joked that his success as a musician had extended his ] for his part in the rumour to "seventeen minutes".<ref>{{cite magazine|last1=LaBour|first1=Fred|title=True Westerners: Fred Labour – Too Slim of Riders in the Sky|url=http://www.truewestmagazine.com/fred-labour-too-slim-of-riders-in-the-sky/|magazine=]|access-date=28 June 2016|date=1 August 2008|archive-date=30 July 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160730052717/http://www.truewestmagazine.com/fred-labour-too-slim-of-riders-in-the-sky/|url-status=dead}}</ref> In 2015, he told '']'' that he is still periodically contacted by conspiracy theorists who have attempted to present him with supposed new developments on the McCartney rumours.<ref>{{cite news|last=Rubin|first=Neal|title=Paul McCartney still isn't dead. Neither is the story|url=http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/columnists/neal-rubin/2015/09/09/neal-rubin-column-riders-sky/71974774/|newspaper=]|date=10 September 2015|access-date=27 June 2016|archive-date=6 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221006225718/https://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/columnists/neal-rubin/2015/09/09/neal-rubin-column-riders-sky/71974774/|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
{{Clear}} | |||
==Analysis and legacy== | ==Analysis and legacy== | ||
Author ] writes that, while the theory behind "Paul is dead" defied logic, its popularity was understandable in a climate where citizens were faced with conspiracy theories insisting that the ] in 1963 was in fact a ].{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=107}} Schaffner said that, given its origins as an item of gossip and intrigue generated by a select group in the "Beatles cult", "Paul is dead" serves as "a genuine folk tale of the ]s era".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} He also described it as "the most monumental hoax since ]' ] persuaded thousands of panicky New Jerseyites that Martian invaders were in the vicinity".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} |
Author ] writes that, while he thinks the theory behind "Paul is dead" defied logic, its popularity was understandable in a climate where citizens were faced with conspiracy theories insisting that the ] in 1963 was in fact a ].{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=107}} Schaffner said that, given its origins as an item of gossip and intrigue generated by a select group in the "Beatles cult", "Paul is dead" serves as "a genuine folk tale of the ]s era".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} He also described it as "the most monumental hoax since ]' ] persuaded thousands of panicky New Jerseyites that Martian invaders were in the vicinity".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} | ||
In his book '']'', ] says that the Beatles were partly responsible for the phenomenon due to their incorporation of "random lyrics and effects", particularly in the White Album track "Glass Onion" in which Lennon invited clue-hunting by including references to other Beatles songs.{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|pp=16, 273–75}} MacDonald groups it with the "psychic epidemics" that were encouraged by the rock audience's use of hallucinogenic drugs and which escalated with ]'s homicidal interpretation of the White Album and ]'s ].{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|pp=273–75}} | |||
⚫ | During the 1970s, the phenomenon became a subject of academic study in America in the fields of ], ] and ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|pp=128–29}} Among sociological studies, Barbara Suczek recognised it as, in Schaffner's description, a contemporary reading of the "archetypal myth wherein the beautiful youth dies and is resurrected as a god".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} Psychologists Ralph Rosnow and ] attributed its popularity partly to the shared, vicarious experience of searching for clues without consequence for the participants. They also said that for a generation distrustful of the media following the ]'s report, it was able to thrive amid a climate informed by "The credibility gap of ]'s presidency, the widely circulated rumors after the ] and ], as well as attacks on the leading media sources by the ] and ]".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} |
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⚫ | During the 1970s, the phenomenon became a subject of academic study in America in the fields of ], ] and ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|pp=128–29}} Among sociological studies, Barbara Suczek recognised it as, in Schaffner's description, a contemporary reading of the "archetypal myth wherein the beautiful youth dies and is resurrected as a god".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} Psychologists Ralph Rosnow and ] attributed its popularity partly to the shared, vicarious experience of searching for clues without consequence for the participants. They also said that for a generation distrustful of the media following the ]'s report, it was able to thrive amid a climate informed by "The credibility gap of ]'s presidency, the widely circulated rumors after the ] and ], as well as attacks on the leading media sources by the ] and ]".{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=128}} | ||
"Paul is dead" has continued to inspire analysis into the 21st century, with published studies by | |||
⚫ | Andru J. Reeve, ] and Brian Moriarty, among others, and exploitative works in the mediums of ] and documentary film.<ref name="Shivani/Dawn" /> Writing in 2016, Beatles biographer ] said, "the theory still has the power to flare back into life."{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}} He cited a 2009 '']'' magazine article that featured an analysis by two forensic research consultants who compared selected photographs of McCartney taken before and after his alleged death by measuring features of the skull.{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}} According to the scientists' findings, the man shown in the post-November 1966 images was not the same.{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}}<ref>Carlesi, Gabriella ''et al.'' (2009) , ''Wired Italia''</ref>{{refn|group=nb|In his article on the legacy of "Paul is dead", for '']'' in January 2017, Anis Shivani wrote that the narrative has grown, in the manner of JFK's assassination, to incorporate related conspiracy theories. In this expanded narrative, Lennon's murder in 1980, Harrison's near-fatal stabbing in 1999, and the death of Beatles associate ] in 1976 are all credited to forces protecting the "truth" behind "Paul is dead".<ref name="Shivani/Dawn" />}} | ||
American social critic ] locates the "Paul is dead" phenomenon to the ] tradition symbolised by ] and ], as represented in the cult of rock music's "pretty, long-haired boys who mesmerize both sexes", and she adds: "It's no coincidence that it was Paul McCartney, the 'cutest' and most girlish of the Beatles, who inspired a false rumor that swept the world in 1969 that he was dead."<ref>{{cite journal|first=Camille|last=Paglia|title=Cults and Cosmic Consciousness: Religious Vision in the American 1960s|journal=]|date=Winter 2003|series=3rd|volume=10|number=3|pages=61–62}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | Similar rumours concerning other celebrities have been circulated, including the unsubstantiated allegation that Canadian singer ] died in 2003 and ].<ref name="Cresci/Guardian">{{cite news|first=Elena|last=Cresci|url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2017/may/15/avril-lavigne-melissa-cloning-conspiracy-theories|title=Why fans think Avril Lavigne died and was replaced by a clone named Melissa|date=16 May 2017|newspaper=]|access-date=1 October 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Lamia|last=Estatie|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-39921209|title=The Avril Lavigne conspiracy theory returns|date=15 May 2017|publisher=]|access-date=1 October 2018}}</ref> In an article on the latter phenomenon, '']'' described the 1969 McCartney hoax as "Possibly the best known example" of a celebrity being the focus of "a (completely unverified) cloning conspiracy theory".<ref name="Cresci/Guardian" /> In 2009, '']'' magazine included "Paul is dead" in its feature on ten of "the world's most enduring conspiracy theories".<ref name="Time" /> | ||
⚫ | "Paul is dead" has continued to inspire analysis into the 21st century, with published studies by Andru J. Reeve, ] and Brian Moriarty, among others, and exploitative works in the mediums of ] and documentary film.<ref name="Shivani/Dawn" /> Writing in 2016, Beatles biographer ] said, "the theory still has the power to flare back into life."{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}} He cited a 2009 '']'' magazine article that featured an analysis by two forensic research consultants who compared selected photographs of McCartney taken before and after his alleged death by measuring features of the skull.{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}} According to the scientists' findings, the man shown in the post-November 1966 images was not the same.{{sfn|Turner|2016|p=368}}<ref>Carlesi, Gabriella ''et al.'' (2009) {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221007174054/https://mag.wired.it/rivista/storie/chiedi-chi-era-quel-beatle.html |date=7 October 2022 }}, ''Wired Italia''</ref>{{refn|group=nb|In his article on the legacy of "Paul is dead", for '']'' in January 2017, Anis Shivani wrote that the narrative has grown, in the manner of JFK's assassination, to incorporate related conspiracy theories. In this expanded narrative, Lennon's murder in 1980, Harrison's near-fatal stabbing in 1999, and the death of Beatles associate ] in 1976 are all credited to forces protecting the "truth" behind "Paul is dead".<ref name="Shivani/Dawn" />}} | ||
⚫ | Similar rumours concerning other celebrities have been circulated, including the unsubstantiated allegation that Canadian singer ] died in 2003 and ].<ref name="Cresci/Guardian">{{cite news|first=Elena|last=Cresci|url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2017/may/15/avril-lavigne-melissa-cloning-conspiracy-theories|title=Why fans think Avril Lavigne died and was replaced by a clone named Melissa|date=16 May 2017|newspaper=]|access-date=1 October 2018|archive-date=15 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220715020329/https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2017/may/15/avril-lavigne-melissa-cloning-conspiracy-theories|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Lamia|last=Estatie|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-39921209|title=The Avril Lavigne conspiracy theory returns|date=15 May 2017|publisher=]|access-date=1 October 2018|archive-date=25 August 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180825092224/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-39921209|url-status=live}}</ref> In an article on the latter phenomenon, '']'' described the 1969 McCartney hoax as "Possibly the best known example" of a celebrity being the focus of "a (completely unverified) cloning conspiracy theory".<ref name="Cresci/Guardian" /> In 2009, '']'' magazine included "Paul is dead" in its feature on ten of "the world's most enduring conspiracy theories".<ref name="Time" /> | ||
==In popular culture== | ==In popular culture== | ||
There have been many references to the legend in popular culture, including the following examples. | There have been many references to the legend in popular culture, including the following examples. | ||
* The June 1970 issue of the ] title '']'' (#222) had a story titled "Dead ... Till Proven Alive" in which it was rumoured that Saul from the band the Oliver Twists was deceased and replaced with a double. On the cover of the comic book, ] is holding an album that mimics the back of ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band''.<ref>{{cite web|first=Brian|last=Cronin|url=https://www.cbr.com/batman-robin-broke-up-beatles/|title=Batman and Robin Broke up the Beatles|publisher=]|date=27 December 2017|access-date=7 September 2021|archive-date=22 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221022113319/https://www.cbr.com/batman-robin-broke-up-beatles/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=William|last=Gatevackes|url=https://www.popmatters.com/115698-the-four-color-adventures-of-the-fab-four-the-beatles-and-comic-book-2496119948.html|title=The Four-Color Adventures of the Fab Four: The Beatles and Comic Books|website=]|date=10 November 2009|access-date=7 September 2021|archive-date=22 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221022113331/https://www.popmatters.com/115698-the-four-color-adventures-of-the-fab-four-the-beatles-and-comic-book-2496119948.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | *In ]' 1978 television film satirising the Beatles' history, '']'', the identity of the alleged dead band member was transferred to the George Harrison character, Stig O'Hara, who was supposed to have died "in a flash fire at a water bed shop" and been replaced by a ] wax model. Building on Harrison's reputation as the "Quiet Beatle", the "Stig is dead" theory was supported by his lack of dialogue in the film{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|p=308}} and clues such as his trouser-less appearance on the cover of the Rutles' ''Shabby Road'' album.<ref>Idle, Eric (1978). "The Rutles Story". '']'' (LP booklet). Warner Bros. Records. p. 16.</ref> | ||
* The 1972 ] comedy album '']'' has several announced "clues" placed throughout, including backmasked segments and notes in the album's gatefold, all parodying the hoax.<ref name="Radio Dinner">{{cite AV media notes|title=]|year=1972|publisher=]|location=US|type=LP liner notes|asin=B001BKLFIE|quote="Clue Number Five: II Tim. 4:6 Clue Number Six: R.I.P. P.Mc."}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine | last=Bangs | first=Lester | date=November 1972|title=Album Review: National Lampoon Radio Dinner|magazine=]}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | * In ]' 1978 television film satirising the Beatles' history, '']'', the identity of the alleged dead band member was transferred to the George Harrison character, Stig O'Hara, who was supposed to have died "in a flash fire at a water bed shop" and been replaced by a ] wax model. Building on Harrison's reputation as the "Quiet Beatle", the "Stig is dead" theory was supported by his lack of dialogue in the film{{sfn|Rodriguez|2010|p=308}} and clues such as his trouser-less appearance on the cover of the Rutles' ''Shabby Road'' album.<ref>Idle, Eric (1978). "The Rutles Story". '']'' (LP booklet). Warner Bros. Records. p. 16.</ref> | ||
* On the February 13, 1993, episode of '']'', Paul McCartney was interviewed on ], a recurring sketch where ] nervously asked questions of his guests, usually on if they remembered parts of their career. Regarding the "Paul Is Dead" rumours, Farley outlined the urban legend, then asked "That was, um, a hoax, right?" McCartney responded by saying "Yeah. I wasn't really dead." | |||
* McCartney titled his 1993 live album '']'' in reference to the hoax.{{sfn|Clayson|2003|p=228}} He also presented it in a sleeve that parodied the ''Abbey Road'' cover and its clues.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=339}} | * McCartney titled his 1993 live album '']'' in reference to the hoax.{{sfn|Clayson|2003|p=228}} He also presented it in a sleeve that parodied the ''Abbey Road'' cover and its clues.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=339}} | ||
*The 1995 video for "]" – a song recorded by Lennon in the late 1970s and completed by McCartney, Harrison and Starr for the band's '']'' project – references "Paul is dead", among other myths relating to the Beatles' impact during the 1960s. According to author Gary Burns, the video indulges in the same "semiological excess" as the 1969 hoax and thereby "spoof" obsessive clue-hunting.{{sfn|Burns|2000|pp=180–81}} | * The 1995 video for "]" – a song recorded by Lennon in the late 1970s and completed by McCartney, Harrison and Starr for the band's '']'' project – references "Paul is dead", among other myths relating to the Beatles' impact during the 1960s. According to author Gary Burns, the video indulges in the same "semiological excess" as the 1969 hoax and thereby "spoof" obsessive clue-hunting.{{sfn|Burns|2000|pp=180–81}} | ||
* In the 1995 episode of '']'', "]", Paul McCartney guest stars and mentions that if his song "Maybe I'm Amazed" is played backwards, it contains a recipe for ]. The song plays over the end credits, and, if played backwards, it not only contains the aforementioned recipe, but also McCartney himself saying "oh, and by the way, I'm alive".<ref>Mirkin, David (2005). Commentary for "Lisa the Vegetarian", in The Simpsons: The Complete Seventh Season . 20th Century Fox.</ref> | |||
⚫ | * In 2010, American author ] published the ] ''Paul Is Undead: The British Zombie Invasion'', which depicts all of the Beatles as ]s except Ringo Starr.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/jul/31/beatles-zombie-mashup |title=The Beatles flesh out zombie mash-up craze |first=Alison |last=Flood |newspaper=] |date=31 July 2009 |access-date=10 January 2016}}</ref> | ||
* "Paul Is Dead", a track on the 1995 ] album ] | |||
⚫ | *In 2015, the indie rock band ] released a song called "Paul Is Alive", which contains lyrics referencing ]<ref>{{cite web |first=Dean|last=Van Nguyen |title=EL VY post lyric video for new single 'Paul Is Alive' |website=] |url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-national-19-1215123 |date=7 October 2015 |access-date=24 July 2017 }}</ref> and partly addresses the 1969 rumour.<ref>{{cite web|author=WCYT staff|title=EL VY – 'Return to the Moon'|publisher=]|url=http://www.wcyt.org/el-vy-return-to-the-moon/|date=16 November 2015|access-date=30 September 2018}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | * In 2010, American author ] published the ] ''Paul Is Undead: The British Zombie Invasion'', which depicts all of the Beatles as ]s except Ringo Starr.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/jul/31/beatles-zombie-mashup |title=The Beatles flesh out zombie mash-up craze |first=Alison |last=Flood |newspaper=] |date=31 July 2009 |access-date=10 January 2016 |archive-date=22 August 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160822200629/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/jul/31/beatles-zombie-mashup |url-status=live }}</ref> | ||
⚫ | *A 2018 comedy short film, ''Paul Is Dead'', depicts a version of events where McCartney dies during a musical retreat and is replaced by a look-alike named Billy Shears.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://urbanistamagazine.uk/paul-is-dead-a-comedy-short-film-inspired-by-the-classic-bizarre-rock-roll-conspiracy-theory/ |title=Paul Is Dead ... A Comedy Short Film Inspired by the Classic Bizarre Rock & Roll Conspiracy Theory |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=30 September 2018 |publisher=urbanistamagazine.uk|access-date=5 February 2019}}</ref> | ||
* '']'' is a 2010 ] directed by ] that purports to tell the story of George Harrison, believing himself to be on his deathbed after being stabbed on December 30, 1999,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1999/12/31/world/george-harrison-stabbed-in-chest-by-an-intruder.html |title=George Harrison Stabbed in Chest by an Intruder |first=Sarah |last=Lyall |newspaper=] |date=31 December 1999 |access-date=April 21, 2023 |archive-date=4 July 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704054829/http://www.nytimes.com/1999/12/31/world/george-harrison-stabbed-in-chest-by-an-intruder.html |url-status=live }}</ref> revealing that McCartney had died in a car crash with a girl named Rita and that ] had orchestrated a coverup through which he was replaced by a lookalike. The film is narrated by a voice actor purporting to be George Harrison, describing over archival footage and reenactment the clues left behind in songs and album art that McCartney was dead.<ref>{{cite AV media|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1683472/ |title=Paul McCartney Really Is Dead: The Last Testament of George Harrison |people=] (director) |year=2010}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | * In 2015, the indie rock band ] released a song called "Paul Is Alive", which contains lyrics referencing ]<ref>{{cite web |first=Dean |last=Van Nguyen |title=EL VY post lyric video for new single 'Paul Is Alive' |website=] |url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-national-19-1215123 |date=7 October 2015 |access-date=24 July 2017 |archive-date=27 September 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180927165046/https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-national-19-1215123 |url-status=live }}</ref> and partly addresses the 1969 rumour.<ref>{{cite web|author=WCYT staff|title=EL VY – 'Return to the Moon'|publisher=]|url=http://www.wcyt.org/el-vy-return-to-the-moon/|date=16 November 2015|access-date=30 September 2018|archive-date=30 September 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180930115733/http://www.wcyt.org/el-vy-return-to-the-moon/|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | * A 2018 comedy short film, ''Paul Is Dead'', depicts a version of events where McCartney dies during a musical retreat and is replaced by a look-alike named Billy Shears.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://urbanistamagazine.uk/paul-is-dead-a-comedy-short-film-inspired-by-the-classic-bizarre-rock-roll-conspiracy-theory/ |title=Paul Is Dead ... A Comedy Short Film Inspired by the Classic Bizarre Rock & Roll Conspiracy Theory |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=30 September 2018 |publisher=urbanistamagazine.uk |access-date=5 February 2019 |archive-date=8 July 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190708080821/https://urbanistamagazine.uk/paul-is-dead-a-comedy-short-film-inspired-by-the-classic-bizarre-rock-roll-conspiracy-theory/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | ||
*A graphic novel co-created by Paolo Baron and Ernesto Carbonetti called '']'' was published in English by ] in 2020. | |||
*In 2023, the American supergroup ] released the song called "Revolution 0" which was originally going to be called "Paul is Dead".<ref>{{Cite news |last=Graye |first=Megan |date=2023-01-20 |title=New Phoebe Bridgers song is about 'falling in love online', as singer confirms she's not engaged |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/phoebe-bridgers-paul-mescal-boy-genius-engaged-b2265803.html |access-date=2024-06-21 |work=The Independent |language=en}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
{{Clear}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | == Notes == | ||
{{Reflist|30em|group=nb}} | {{Reflist|30em|group=nb}} | ||
==References== | == References == | ||
{{Reflist|30em}} | {{Reflist|30em}} | ||
== |
== Bibliography == | ||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | {{Refbegin|30em}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=The Beatles|title=The Beatles Anthology|publisher=Chronicle Books|location=San Francisco, CA|year=2000|isbn=0-8118-2684-8|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesanthology0000unse}} | * {{cite book|last=The Beatles|title=The Beatles Anthology|publisher=Chronicle Books|location=San Francisco, CA|year=2000|isbn=0-8118-2684-8|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesanthology0000unse}} | ||
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* {{cite book|last=Miles|first=Barry|author-link=Barry Miles|title=Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now|year=1997|publisher=Henry Holt & Company|location=New York, NY|isbn=978-0-8050-5248-0|url=https://archive.org/details/paulmccartneyman00mile_0|url-access=registration}} | * {{cite book|last=Miles|first=Barry|author-link=Barry Miles|title=Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now|year=1997|publisher=Henry Holt & Company|location=New York, NY|isbn=978-0-8050-5248-0|url=https://archive.org/details/paulmccartneyman00mile_0|url-access=registration}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Miles|first=Barry|title=The Beatles Diary Volume 1: The Beatles Years|year=2001|publisher=Omnibus Press|location=London|isbn=0-7119-8308-9 }} | * {{cite book|last=Miles|first=Barry|title=The Beatles Diary Volume 1: The Beatles Years|year=2001|publisher=Omnibus Press|location=London|isbn=0-7119-8308-9 }} | ||
*{{cite book|first=R. Gary|last=Patterson|title=The Walrus Was Paul: The Great Beatle Death Clues|publisher=Fireside|location=New York, NY|year=1998|isbn=0-684-85062-1}} | * {{cite book|first=R. Gary|last=Patterson|title=The Walrus Was Paul: The Great Beatle Death Clues|publisher=Fireside|location=New York, NY|year=1998|isbn=0-684-85062-1}} | ||
*{{cite book |
* {{cite book|first=Andru J.|last=Reeve|title=Turn Me On, Dead Man: The Beatles and the "Paul-Is-Dead" Hoax|publisher=Popular Culture Ink|location=Ann Arbor, MI|year=1994|isbn=1560750359}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Rodriguez|first=Robert|title=Fab Four FAQ 2.0: The Beatles' Solo Years, 1970–1980|publisher=Backbeat Books|location=Milwaukee, WI|year=2010|isbn=978-1-4165-9093-4|url=https://archive.org/details/missodellmyhardd00odel}} | * {{cite book|last=Rodriguez|first=Robert|title=Fab Four FAQ 2.0: The Beatles' Solo Years, 1970–1980|publisher=Backbeat Books|location=Milwaukee, WI|year=2010|isbn=978-1-4165-9093-4|url=https://archive.org/details/missodellmyhardd00odel}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Schaffner|first=Nicholas|author-link=Nicholas Schaffner|title=The Beatles Forever|publisher=McGraw-Hill|location=New York, NY|year=1978|isbn=0-07-055087-5|url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesforever00scha}} | * {{cite book|last=Schaffner|first=Nicholas|author-link=Nicholas Schaffner|title=The Beatles Forever|publisher=McGraw-Hill|location=New York, NY|year=1978|isbn=0-07-055087-5|url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesforever00scha}} | ||
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{commons category}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 16:01, 26 December 2024
Urban legend and conspiracy theory about Paul McCartney"Paul Is Dead" redirects here. For the graphic novel, see Paul Is Dead (comics). For the Miracles episode, see Paul is Dead (Miracles episode). "William Shears" redirects here. For the industrialist, see James Shears and Sons.
"Paul is dead" is an urban legend and conspiracy theory alleging that English musician Paul McCartney of the Beatles died in 1966 and was secretly replaced by a look-alike. The rumour began circulating in 1966, gaining broad popularity in September 1969 following reports on American college campuses.
According to the theory, McCartney died in a car crash, and to spare the public from grief, the surviving Beatles, aided by Britain's MI5, replaced him with a McCartney look-alike, subsequently communicating this secret through subtle details of their albums. Proponents perceived clues among elements of Beatles songs and cover artwork; clue-hunting proved infectious, and by October 1969 had become an international phenomenon. Rumours declined after Life published an interview with McCartney in November 1969.
The phenomenon was the subject of analysis in the fields of sociology, psychology and communications during the 1970s. McCartney parodied the hoax with the title and cover art of his 1993 live album, Paul Is Live. The legend was among ten of "the world's most enduring conspiracy theories" according to Time in 2009.
Beginnings
Although rumours that Paul McCartney's health was deteriorating had existed since early 1966, reports that McCartney had died only started circulating in September of that year. The Beatles' press officer, Tony Barrow, recounted this in his book, John, Paul, George, Ringo and Me. Fleet Street reporters started phoning Barrow early in that month, to confirm rumours regarding the Beatle's health and even a possible death, to which he replied that he had recently spoken with McCartney.
For the rest of 1966, the rumour was eclipsed by similar reports that Paul McCartney was working on a solo project and that the Beatles were splitting up, which were backed by their disappearance from the public eye and the postponement of their scheduled tours in late 1966.
In early 1967, the rumour resurfaced in London, this time claiming that Paul McCartney had been killed in a traffic accident while driving along the M1 motorway on 7 January. The rumour was acknowledged and rebutted in the February issue of The Beatles Book. McCartney then alluded to the rumour during a press conference held about the release of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in May.
The Beatles' producer George Martin once claimed that, during the Beatles’ visit to Denver, Colorado, "a number of people pretending to be Beatles" were employed by the promoters of the band's concerts in order to distract the crowds of fans from the real Beatles, while they were exiting a hotel. According to journalist Maureen O'Grady, who wrote about it in the May 1966 issue of RAVE Magazine, such a tactic was used when the Beatles first played in Baltimore, in 1964. As a result, stories began to circulate that the Beatles had sent four lookalikes to perform on stage on one of their American tours. Both Paul McCartney and George Harrison later refuted these claims.
Despite the Beatles dismissing such accusations, they soon began accompanying the notion that McCartney had died. By late 1967, it was further stated that the Beatles had covered up his death by employing a Paul McCartney impersonator to stand in for him. For example, journalist Jay Marks was attending McCartney's engagement party in 1967 when a friend of the band told him that McCartney had been replaced.
By the mid-1960s, the Beatles were known for sometimes including backmasking in their music. Analysing their lyrics for hidden meaning had also become a popular trend in the US. In November 1968, their self-titled double LP (also known as the "White Album") was released containing the track "Glass Onion". John Lennon wrote the song in response to "gobbledygook" said about Sgt. Pepper. In a later interview, he said that he was purposely confusing listeners with lines such as "the Walrus was Paul" – a reference to his song "I Am the Walrus" from the 1967 EP and album Magical Mystery Tour.
"Revolution 9" (section) The allegedly backmasked section of "Revolution 9""Revolution 9" (section) (reversed) The same section reversed, which some believe sounds like "turn me on, dead man"
Problems playing these files? See media help.
On 17 September 1969, Tim Harper, an editor of the Drake Times-Delphic, the student newspaper of Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, published an article titled "Is Beatle Paul McCartney Dead?" The article addressed a rumour being circulated on campus that cited clues from recent Beatles albums, including a message interpreted as "Turn me on, dead man", heard when the White Album track "Revolution 9" is played backwards. Also referenced was the back cover of Sgt. Pepper, where every Beatle except McCartney is photographed facing the viewer. He is wearing a black badge "OPD" (Officially Pronounced Dead). On the front cover, Starr in a suit looks at the flowered grave, mourning, and McCartney (in a suit) puts his hand on his shoulder. Starr looks sadly down at a tomb shaped like a P, with 4 strings looking like a bass. The front cover of Magical Mystery Tour depicts one unidentified band member in a differently coloured suit from the other three. According to music journalist Merrell Noden, Harper's Drake Times-Delphic was the first to publish an article on the "Paul is dead" theory. Harper later said that it had become the subject of discussion among students at the start of the new academic year, and he added: "A lot of us, because of Vietnam and the so-called Establishment, were ready, willing and able to believe just about any sort of conspiracy."
In late September 1969, the Beatles released the album Abbey Road while they were in the process of disbanding. On 10 October, the Beatles' press officer, Derek Taylor, responded to the rumour stating:
Recently we've been getting a flood of inquiries asking about reports that Paul is dead. We've been getting questions like that for years, of course, but in the past few weeks we've been getting them at the office and home night and day. I'm even getting telephone calls from disc jockeys and others in the United States.
Throughout this period, McCartney felt isolated from his bandmates in his opposition to their choice of business manager, Allen Klein, and distraught at Lennon's private announcement that he was leaving the group. With the birth of his daughter Mary in late August, McCartney had withdrawn to focus on his family life. On 22 October, the day that the "Paul is dead" rumour became an international news story, McCartney, his wife Linda and their two daughters travelled to Scotland to spend time at his farm near Campbeltown.
Growth
On 12 October 1969, a caller to Detroit radio station WKNR-FM told disc jockey Russ Gibb about the rumour and its clues. Gibb and other callers then discussed the rumour on air for the next hour, during which Gibb offered further potential clues. Two days later, The Michigan Daily published a satirical review of Abbey Road by University of Michigan student Fred LaBour, who had listened to the exchange on Gibb's show, under the headline "McCartney Dead; New Evidence Brought to Light". It identified various clues to McCartney's alleged death on Beatles album covers, particularly on the Abbey Road sleeve. LaBour later said he had invented many of the clues and was astonished when the story was picked up by newspapers across the United States. Noden writes that "Very soon, every college campus, every radio station, had a resident expert." WKNR fuelled the rumour further with its two-hour programme The Beatle Plot, which first aired on 19 October. The show – which has been called "infamous", a "fraud" and a "mockumentary" – brought enormous worldwide publicity to Gibb and WKNR.
The story was soon taken up by more mainstream radio stations in the New York area, WMCA and WABC. In the early hours of 21 October, WABC disc jockey Roby Yonge discussed the rumour on-air for over an hour before being pulled off the air for breaking format. At that time of night, WABC's signal covered a wide listening area and could be heard in 38 US states and, at times, in other countries. Although the Beatles' press office denied the rumour, McCartney's atypical withdrawal from public life contributed to its escalation. Vin Scelsa, a student broadcaster in 1969, later said that the escalation was indicative of the countercultural influence of Bob Dylan, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, since: "Every song from them – starting about late 1966 – became a personal message, worthy of endless scrutiny ... they were guidelines on how to live your life."
WMCA dispatched Alex Bennett to the Beatles' Apple Corps headquarters in London on 23 October, to further his extended coverage of the "Paul is dead" theory. There, Ringo Starr told Bennett: "If people are gonna believe it, they're gonna believe it. I can only say it's not true." In a radio interview with John Small of WKNR, Lennon said that the rumour was "insane" but good publicity for Abbey Road. On Halloween night 1969, WKBW in Buffalo, New York, broadcast a programme titled Paul McCartney Is Alive and Well – Maybe, which analysed Beatles lyrics and other clues. The WKBW DJs concluded that the "Paul is dead" hoax was fabricated by Lennon.
Before the end of October 1969, several record releases had exploited the phenomenon of McCartney's alleged demise. These included "The Ballad of Paul" by the Mystery Tour; "Brother Paul" by Billy Shears and the All Americans; "So Long Paul" by Werbley Finster, a pseudonym for José Feliciano; and Zacharias and His Tree People's "We're All Paul Bearers (Parts One and Two)". Another song was Terry Knight's "Saint Paul", which had been a minor hit in June that year and was subsequently adopted by radio stations as a tribute to "the late Paul McCartney". A cover version of "Saint Paul" by New Zealand singer Shane reached the top of that nation's singles charts. According to a report in Billboard magazine in early November, Shelby Singleton Productions planned to issue a documentary LP of radio segments discussing the phenomenon. In Canada, Polydor Records exploited the rumour in their artwork for Very Together, a repackaging of the Beatles' pre-fame recordings with Tony Sheridan, using a cover that showed four candles, one of which had just been snuffed out.
Premise
Many versions of this theory have arisen since its initial exposure to the public, but most proponents of the theory maintain that, on 9 November 1966 (or alternatively, 11 September), McCartney had an argument with his bandmates during a Sgt. Pepper recording session and drove off angrily in his car, then, distracted by a meter maid ("Lovely Rita"), failed to notice that the traffic lights had changed ("A Day In The Life"), crashed, and was decapitated ("Don't Pass Me By"). A funeral service for McCartney was held, with eulogies by Harrison ("Blue Jay Way") and Starr ("Don't Pass Me By"), followed by a procession (Abbey Road's front cover), with Lennon as the priest officiating his funeral and burying him (the alleged "I Buried Paul" statement in "Strawberry Fields Forever"). To spare the public from grief, or simply as a joke, the surviving Beatles replaced him with the winner of a McCartney look-alike contest. This scenario was facilitated by the Beatles' recent retirement from live performance and by their choosing to present themselves with a new image for their next album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which they began recording later that month.
In LaBour's telling, the stand-in was an "orphan from Edinburgh named William Campbell" whom the Beatles then trained to impersonate McCartney. Others contended that the man's name was Bill Shepherd, later altered to Billy Shears, and the replacement was instigated by Britain's MI5 out of concern for the severe distress McCartney's death would cause the Beatles' audience. In this latter telling, the surviving Beatles were said to be wracked with guilt over their actions, and therefore left messages in their music and album artwork to communicate the truth to their fans.
—Ringo StarrA DJ put all those signs together: Paul with no shoes ... and the Volkswagen Beetle. Then there was Magical Mystery Tour, where we three had red roses and he had a black one. It was just madness ... There was no way we could prove he was alive.
Dozens of supposed clues to McCartney's death have been identified by fans and followers of the legend. These include messages perceived when listening to songs being played backwards and symbolic interpretations of both lyrics and album cover imagery. Two frequently cited examples are the suggestions that the words "I buried Paul" are spoken by Lennon in the final section of the song "Strawberry Fields Forever", which the Beatles recorded in November and December 1966 (Lennon later said that the words were actually "Cranberry sauce"), and that the words "number nine, number nine" in "Revolution 9" (from the "White Album") became "turn me on, dead man, turn me on, dead man" when played backwards. A similar reversal at the end of "I'm So Tired" (another "White Album" track) yielded "Paul is dead man, miss him, miss him, miss him…".
Another example is the interpretation of the Abbey Road album cover as depicting a funeral procession: Lennon, dressed in white, is said to symbolise the heavenly figure; Starr, dressed in black, symbolises the undertaker; George Harrison, in denim, represents the gravedigger; and McCartney, barefoot and out of step with the others, symbolises the corpse. The number plate of the white Volkswagen Beetle in the photo – containing the characters LMW 281F (mistakenly read as "28IF") – was identified as further "evidence". "28IF" represented McCartney's age "if" he had still been alive (although McCartney was 27 when the album was recorded and released), while "LMW" stood for "Linda McCartney weeps" or "Linda McCartney, widow" (although McCartney and the then-Linda Eastman had not yet met in 1966, the year of his alleged death). That the left-handed McCartney held a cigarette in his right hand was also said to support the idea that he was an impostor.
Rebuttal
On 21 October 1969, the Beatles' press office again issued statements denying the rumour, deeming it "a load of old rubbish" and saying that "the story has been circulating for about two years – we get letters from all sorts of nuts but Paul is still very much with us". On 24 October, BBC Radio reporter Chris Drake was granted an interview with McCartney at his farm. McCartney said that the speculation was understandable, given that he normally did "an interview a week" to ensure he remained in the news. Part of the interview was first broadcast on Radio 4, on 26 October, and subsequently on WMCA in the US. According to author John Winn, McCartney had agreed to the interview "in hopes that people hearing his voice would see the light", but the ploy failed.
McCartney was secretly filmed by a CBS News crew as he worked on his farm. As in his and Linda's segment in the Beatles' promotional clip for "Something", which the couple filmed privately around this time, McCartney was unshaven and unusually scruffy-looking in his appearance. His next visitors were a reporter and photographer from Life magazine. Irate at the intrusion, he swore at the pair, threw a bucket of water over them and was captured on film attempting to hit the photographer. Fearing that the photos would damage his image, McCartney then approached the pair and agreed to pose for a photo with his family and answer the reporter's questions, in exchange for the roll of film containing the offending pictures. In Winn's description, the family portrait used for Life's cover shows McCartney no longer "shabbily attired", but "clean-shaven and casually but smartly dressed".
Following the publication of the article and the photo, in the issue dated 7 November, the rumour started to decline. In the interview, McCartney said the rumour was "bloody stupid" and went on to say:
Perhaps the rumour started because I haven't been much in the press lately. I have done enough press for a lifetime, and I don't have anything to say these days. I am happy to be with my family and I will work when I work. I was switched on for ten years and I never switched off. Now I am switching off whenever I can. I would rather be a little less famous these days.
Aftermath
In November 1969, Capitol Records sales managers reported a significant increase in sales of Beatles catalogue albums, attributed to the rumour. Rocco Catena, Capitol's vice-president of national merchandising, estimated that "this is going to be the biggest month in history in terms of Beatles sales". The rumour benefited the commercial performance of Abbey Road in the US, where it comfortably outsold all of the band's previous albums. Sgt. Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour, both of which had been off the charts since February, re-entered the Billboard Top LPs chart, peaking at number 101 and number 109, respectively.
A television special dedicated to "Paul is dead" was broadcast on WOR in New York on 30 November. Titled Paul McCartney: The Complete Story, Told for the First and Last Time, it was set in a courtroom and hosted by celebrity lawyer F. Lee Bailey, who cross-examined LaBour, Gibb and other proponents of the theory, and heard opposing views from "witnesses" such as McCartney's friend Peter Asher, brother Mike McCartney and Allen Klein. Bailey left it to the viewer to determine a conclusion. Before the recording, LaBour told Bailey that his article had been intended as a joke, to which Bailey sighed and replied, "Well, we have an hour of television to do; you're going to have to go along with this."
—Paul McCartneyIt was a bit weird meeting people shortly after that, because they'd be looking at the back of my ears, looking a bit through me. And it was weird doing the "I really am him" stuff.
McCartney returned to London in December. Bolstered by Linda's support, he began recording his debut solo album at his home in St John's Wood. Titled McCartney, and recorded without his bandmates' knowledge, it was "one of the best-kept secrets in rock history" until shortly before its release in April 1970, according to author Nicholas Schaffner, and led to the announcement of the Beatles' break-up. In his 1971 song "How Do You Sleep?", in which he attacked McCartney's character, Lennon described the theorists as "freaks" who “was right when they said you was dead". The rumour was also cited in the hoax surrounding the Canadian band Klaatu, after a January 1977 review of their debut album, 3:47 EST, sparked rumours that the group were in fact the Beatles. In one telling, this theory contended that the album had been recorded in late 1966 but then mislaid until 1975, at which point Lennon, Harrison and Starr elected to issue it in McCartney's memory.
LaBour later became notable as the bassist for the western swing group Riders in the Sky, which he co-founded in 1977. In 2008, he joked that his success as a musician had extended his fifteen minutes of fame for his part in the rumour to "seventeen minutes". In 2015, he told The Detroit News that he is still periodically contacted by conspiracy theorists who have attempted to present him with supposed new developments on the McCartney rumours.
Analysis and legacy
Author Peter Doggett writes that, while he thinks the theory behind "Paul is dead" defied logic, its popularity was understandable in a climate where citizens were faced with conspiracy theories insisting that the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963 was in fact a coup d'état. Schaffner said that, given its origins as an item of gossip and intrigue generated by a select group in the "Beatles cult", "Paul is dead" serves as "a genuine folk tale of the mass communications era". He also described it as "the most monumental hoax since Orson Welles' War of the Worlds broadcast persuaded thousands of panicky New Jerseyites that Martian invaders were in the vicinity".
In his book Revolution in the Head, Ian MacDonald says that the Beatles were partly responsible for the phenomenon due to their incorporation of "random lyrics and effects", particularly in the White Album track "Glass Onion" in which Lennon invited clue-hunting by including references to other Beatles songs. MacDonald groups it with the "psychic epidemics" that were encouraged by the rock audience's use of hallucinogenic drugs and which escalated with Charles Manson's homicidal interpretation of the White Album and Mark David Chapman's murder of Lennon in 1980.
During the 1970s, the phenomenon became a subject of academic study in America in the fields of sociology, psychology and communications. Among sociological studies, Barbara Suczek recognised it as, in Schaffner's description, a contemporary reading of the "archetypal myth wherein the beautiful youth dies and is resurrected as a god". Psychologists Ralph Rosnow and Gary Fine attributed its popularity partly to the shared, vicarious experience of searching for clues without consequence for the participants. They also said that for a generation distrustful of the media following the Warren Commission's report, it was able to thrive amid a climate informed by "The credibility gap of Lyndon Johnson's presidency, the widely circulated rumors after the Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy assassinations, as well as attacks on the leading media sources by the yippies and Spiro Agnew".
American social critic Camille Paglia locates the "Paul is dead" phenomenon to the Ancient Greek tradition symbolised by Adonis and Antinous, as represented in the cult of rock music's "pretty, long-haired boys who mesmerize both sexes", and she adds: "It's no coincidence that it was Paul McCartney, the 'cutest' and most girlish of the Beatles, who inspired a false rumor that swept the world in 1969 that he was dead."
"Paul is dead" has continued to inspire analysis into the 21st century, with published studies by Andru J. Reeve, Nick Kollerstrom and Brian Moriarty, among others, and exploitative works in the mediums of mockumentary and documentary film. Writing in 2016, Beatles biographer Steve Turner said, "the theory still has the power to flare back into life." He cited a 2009 Wired Italia magazine article that featured an analysis by two forensic research consultants who compared selected photographs of McCartney taken before and after his alleged death by measuring features of the skull. According to the scientists' findings, the man shown in the post-November 1966 images was not the same.
Similar rumours concerning other celebrities have been circulated, including the unsubstantiated allegation that Canadian singer Avril Lavigne died in 2003 and was replaced by a person named Melissa Vandella. In an article on the latter phenomenon, The Guardian described the 1969 McCartney hoax as "Possibly the best known example" of a celebrity being the focus of "a (completely unverified) cloning conspiracy theory". In 2009, Time magazine included "Paul is dead" in its feature on ten of "the world's most enduring conspiracy theories".
In popular culture
There have been many references to the legend in popular culture, including the following examples.
- The June 1970 issue of the DC Comics title Batman (#222) had a story titled "Dead ... Till Proven Alive" in which it was rumoured that Saul from the band the Oliver Twists was deceased and replaced with a double. On the cover of the comic book, Robin is holding an album that mimics the back of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
- The 1972 National Lampoon comedy album Radio Dinner has several announced "clues" placed throughout, including backmasked segments and notes in the album's gatefold, all parodying the hoax.
- In the Rutles' 1978 television film satirising the Beatles' history, All You Need Is Cash, the identity of the alleged dead band member was transferred to the George Harrison character, Stig O'Hara, who was supposed to have died "in a flash fire at a water bed shop" and been replaced by a Madame Tussauds wax model. Building on Harrison's reputation as the "Quiet Beatle", the "Stig is dead" theory was supported by his lack of dialogue in the film and clues such as his trouser-less appearance on the cover of the Rutles' Shabby Road album.
- On the February 13, 1993, episode of Saturday Night Live, Paul McCartney was interviewed on The Chris Farley Show, a recurring sketch where Chris Farley nervously asked questions of his guests, usually on if they remembered parts of their career. Regarding the "Paul Is Dead" rumours, Farley outlined the urban legend, then asked "That was, um, a hoax, right?" McCartney responded by saying "Yeah. I wasn't really dead."
- McCartney titled his 1993 live album Paul Is Live in reference to the hoax. He also presented it in a sleeve that parodied the Abbey Road cover and its clues.
- The 1995 video for "Free as a Bird" – a song recorded by Lennon in the late 1970s and completed by McCartney, Harrison and Starr for the band's Anthology project – references "Paul is dead", among other myths relating to the Beatles' impact during the 1960s. According to author Gary Burns, the video indulges in the same "semiological excess" as the 1969 hoax and thereby "spoof" obsessive clue-hunting.
- In the 1995 episode of The Simpsons, "Lisa the Vegetarian", Paul McCartney guest stars and mentions that if his song "Maybe I'm Amazed" is played backwards, it contains a recipe for lentil soup. The song plays over the end credits, and, if played backwards, it not only contains the aforementioned recipe, but also McCartney himself saying "oh, and by the way, I'm alive".
- "Paul Is Dead", a track on the 1995 Yo La Tengo album Electr-O-Pura
- In 2010, American author Alan Goldsher published the mashup novel Paul Is Undead: The British Zombie Invasion, which depicts all of the Beatles as zombies except Ringo Starr.
- Paul McCartney Really Is Dead: The Last Testament of George Harrison is a 2010 mockumentary directed by Joel Gilbert that purports to tell the story of George Harrison, believing himself to be on his deathbed after being stabbed on December 30, 1999, revealing that McCartney had died in a car crash with a girl named Rita and that British intelligence agencies had orchestrated a coverup through which he was replaced by a lookalike. The film is narrated by a voice actor purporting to be George Harrison, describing over archival footage and reenactment the clues left behind in songs and album art that McCartney was dead.
- In 2015, the indie rock band EL VY released a song called "Paul Is Alive", which contains lyrics referencing Beatlemania and partly addresses the 1969 rumour.
- A 2018 comedy short film, Paul Is Dead, depicts a version of events where McCartney dies during a musical retreat and is replaced by a look-alike named Billy Shears.
- A graphic novel co-created by Paolo Baron and Ernesto Carbonetti called Paul Is Dead was published in English by Image Comics in 2020.
- In 2023, the American supergroup Boygenius released the song called "Revolution 0" which was originally going to be called "Paul is Dead".
See also
Notes
- Writing in 1977, author Nicholas Schaffner said the theory has been traced to a student thesis at Ohio Wesleyan University and to a prank article published in the student newspaper for Northern Illinois University. The university eventually retracted the article in 2023 due to the false and plagiarized nature of its content, writing an apology to McCartney for their role in propagating the hoax.
- Estranged from McCartney, Lennon said: "Paul McCartney couldn't die without the world knowing it. The same as he couldn't get married ... go on holiday without the world knowing it. It's just insanity – but it's a great plug for Abbey Road."
- A Capitol Records recording artist, Knight had been present during the White Album session when Starr temporarily left the band, in August 1968. In the song, the singer conveys his fears that the Beatles were about to disband.
- The fact that he would have been 27 in late 1969, rather than 28, was dismissed with the rationale that, in the Hindu tradition, infants were one year old at birth.
- In the 2000 book The Beatles Anthology, McCartney says that his reaction to the rumour's growth had been: "Well, we'd better play it for all it's worth. It's publicity, isn't it?"
- In his article on the legacy of "Paul is dead", for Dawn in January 2017, Anis Shivani wrote that the narrative has grown, in the manner of JFK's assassination, to incorporate related conspiracy theories. In this expanded narrative, Lennon's murder in 1980, Harrison's near-fatal stabbing in 1999, and the death of Beatles associate Mal Evans in 1976 are all credited to forces protecting the "truth" behind "Paul is dead".
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{{cite book}}
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- Miles, Barry (1997). Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now. New York, NY: Henry Holt & Company. ISBN 978-0-8050-5248-0.
- Miles, Barry (2001). The Beatles Diary Volume 1: The Beatles Years. London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-8308-9.
- Patterson, R. Gary (1998). The Walrus Was Paul: The Great Beatle Death Clues. New York, NY: Fireside. ISBN 0-684-85062-1.
- Reeve, Andru J. (1994). Turn Me On, Dead Man: The Beatles and the "Paul-Is-Dead" Hoax. Ann Arbor, MI: Popular Culture Ink. ISBN 1560750359.
- Rodriguez, Robert (2010). Fab Four FAQ 2.0: The Beatles' Solo Years, 1970–1980. Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books. ISBN 978-1-4165-9093-4.
- Schaffner, Nicholas (1978). The Beatles Forever. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-055087-5.
- Sounes, Howard (2010). Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-723705-0.
- Turner, Steve (2016). Beatles '66: The Revolutionary Year. New York, NY: Ecco. ISBN 978-0-06-247558-9.
- Winn, John C. (2009). That Magic Feeling: The Beatles' Recorded Legacy, Volume Two, 1966–1970. New York, NY: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-307-45239-9.
External links
- National Post's guide to "Paul is dead" clues, May 2017
- "The 70 Greatest Conspiracy Theories in Pop-Culture History", Vulture, October 2016
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